SIWI Community’s Access to Information in Protecting Child
Domestic Workers
Tri Joko Sri Haryono
and Sri Endah Kinasih
Department of Anthropology, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
Keywords: Child Domestic Workers, Exclusion, Exploitation.
Abstract: This study explains the limited access of child domestic workers to information, which causes them to have
difficulties in obtaining information and access regarding any efforts to develop organizations or join
organizations that are able to advocate for their rights as women, children and citizens. The purpose of this
study is to explain the SIWI community assistants who have concern for the conditions of children who are
working in the worst job sectors. This research is descriptive research using the qualitative method. The
research location is in Surabaya by conducting observation, in-depth interview and Focus Group Discussion
(FGD) as its data collection method. The informants for this research were the child domestic workers, the
community leaders, the Department of Human Resource Development and Culture, the Child Protection
Institution, the Department of Social Services, Labor, and Transmigration and the Department of Education.
The results of this research show that those child domestic workers are prone to exploitation and social
exclusion because they are treated like an employer's property. Through this SIWI community, they can gather
together, share stories about their daily lives, knowledge and skills to gain information and access towards
better jobs and no longer be domestic workers anymore. This study implies that the access to basic services
and policy advocacy at various levels must be enhanced to ensure the realization of child labor protection.
1 INTRODUCTION
Domestic workers can be grouped into two types.
The first is adult domestic workers and the second is
child domestic workers. Child domestic workers are
then also classified into two categories, namely child
domestic workers for local needs or domestic
(Irawaty, 2011). The second is for foreign countries
or overseas where the child domestic workers will be
sent to Vietnam (Gribble & Tran, 2016), Mexico, and
The Philippines (Espinosa, 2016) which menas they
can be categorised as migrant workers. There is also
differentiation from the origins of CDW that is the
one who still has family relations and the one who is
not.
According to ILO (2013), there were 67 million
domestic workers around the world, and 83% of them
were women. While in Indonesia, According to the
National Labour Force Survey there were 2,555,000
domestic workers in 2013 then increasing to
4,034,290 in 2015 and from this total 74% are women
(ILO, 2017). The ILO data are the result of a study on
the estimation of the total number of domestic
workers based on the National Labour Force Survey,
which is available in the report with a title Toward a
Better Estimation of Total Population of Domestic
Workers in Indonesia. Based on an ILO survey that
was conducted in Jakarta in 2016, there are 4.5
million local domestic workers who are working in
the country. The number will increase and is in line
with the level of economic growth in Indonesia.
These increasing numbers show that domestic
workers are an essential part of the social and
economic order.
The increase in the number of domestic workers
shows that the tendency of the localworker's presence
is needed and becomes an employment field that is
able to absorb a lot of workers, especially women
(Venny, 2005, p. 4). This work has the prospect of
becoming a regular job. Unfortunately, however, the
increase in the number does not mean they have
robust bargaining power. They are still far from
prosperous and far from having decent working
conditions (ILO-IPEC, 2004, pp. 109-110).
Socially, the domestic workers have lower
positions towards their relations with their employers
(Muryanti, 2005, p. 9). It can be seen in the condition
of the people who are more familiar with calling
128
Haryono, T. and Kinasih, S.
SIWI Community’s Access to Information in Protecting Child Domestic Workers.
DOI: 10.5220/0008817801280131
In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Contemporary Social and Political Affairs (ICoCSPA 2018), pages 128-131
ISBN: 978-989-758-393-3
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
domestic workers helpers rather than calling them
domestic workers. This situation indicates that the
community still does not genuinely acknowledge the
vital role of domestic workers and is always looking
down on them (Utami, 2005, pp. 46-47).
When viewed from the significant increase in the
number of domestic workers and most of them are
experiencing unfavourable work situations, they are
able to reverse the situation. Thus, consolidating the
power of domestic workers through unions is one
possible answer. The organisation experience has
been best exemplified by the workers. Through the
unions, the workers could build awareness regarding
decent work and gather the power to fight for it. The
establishment of the International Domestic Workers
Federation (IDWF), an affiliate of domestic workers'
organisations in 54 countries, is evidence that
domestic workers still need support in organising a
movement.
The right to associate for domestic workers and
child domestic workers can be found in Article 1,
Paragraph 3 of Act no. 21 the year 2000 about trade
unions. The assistance conducted by the National
Network Advocacy for Domestic Workers with ILO
Jakarta found that there are 13 domestic worker
organisations spread in Jakarta, Bogor, Depok,
Tangerang, Bekasi, Lampung, Makasar, Yogyakarta
and Semarang, and five of them have become unions.
Limited access of domestic workers to the
information makes it difficult for them to obtain the
knowledge regarding how to develop organisations or
join organisations that can fight for their rights as
women, domestic workers and citizens. In Surabaya,
there is no organisation for domestic workers, there is
only a community called SIWI that is a platform for
CDW activities.
SIWI Community is a community that consists of girl
domestic workers. This community provides skills
and crafts training in order to break the chain and help
girls not to continue to work as domestic workers. It
is because if the parents become a domestic worker
then their children will follow the same path. Besides
that, the SIWI Community has also informed their
members regarding gender injustice that is faced by
women and children.
2 TRAINING ABOUT GENDER
INEQUALITY IN AN EFFORT
TO PROTECT CHILD
DOMESTIC WORKERS IN
SIWI COMMUNITY
Community participation which has developed to
avoid the act of exclusion from any group is perceived
as an indicator of social involvement in the
community development program (Shortall, 2008, p.
452). Community development is characterised by
avoiding the labelling attitude towards several groups
or society who are socially different to the dominant
culture, and it is essential to attract participation from
all stakeholders. According to Cornwall (2008, p.
296), the concept of the involvement is to be
beneficial by inviting all parties to take part in the
activity.
SIWI is a community which consists of girls who
work as domestic workers and some adult associates
from Samitra Abhaya KPPD, Center for Human
Rights Studies of Universitas, also from the arts and
cultural community who have a concern for the
conditions of children who work in the worst job
sectors. The SIWI community was officially
established on October 10, 2013, and served as a
place for girls to learn, to organise and practice their
life skills for their survival, although their formal
education is insufficient. The embryo of SIWI
formation began with gathering several Child
Domestic Workers in the area of Gunung Anyar
Tambak Surabaya.
These small groups often gather to make
handicrafts. Furthermore, the idea to create a
community for young women especially those who
work as Child Domestic Workers began to appear.
The members consist of part-time Child Domestic
Workers who come from Gunung Anyar Tambak
Surabaya. The SIWI community hopes that they can
reach out to the other friends who work in the same
field, especially ones who work full-time and live in
their employers' houses. Such children are more
vulnerable to exploitation and more socially
excluded, and treated like an employer's property.
Whatever they want to do, they must receive approval
from their employer.
The difference between part-time and full-time
child domestic workers lies in their working hours.
The part-time ones work after school or before going
to school. Their jobs include babysitting, house
cleaning, washing clothes, dropping off and pick up
their employer’s children to school. Their parents
usually work as housing security guards, domestic
SIWI Community’s Access to Information in Protecting Child Domestic Workers
129
workers, gardeners, factory workers, builders and
laundry workers. In contrast, the full-time workers
work and stay in their employer’s house. There is a
high probability that they will works 24 hours a day,
without any day-off except when there is an Eid
holiday. Most of them come from outside Surabaya
from places such as Malang, Madura, Jombang,
Nganjuk, Blitar and Kediri. The work that they do
includes cleaning the house and babysitting. Some of
them are working from morning until afternoon in
their employer’s home, then, in the evening, they are
asked to take care of the store such as the food stalls.
They receive this job information from their family or
relatives, such as mother, sister, aunt, a brother-in-law
who already becomes domestic workers in Surabaya.
The children who are part-time domestic workers
should be able to go back home if they are sick. On
the contrary, the full-time child domestic workers, if
they have mild sickness, only receive medicine; they
are only allowed to go home when they have a severe
illness. They find it hard to obtain health services in
their working place since most of them come from
outside Surabaya and they also do not have identity
cards.
There are similarities between child domestic
workers and their parents who also work as domestic
workers. The reason why children are willing to work
is mostly to help their parents and improve their
economic conditions, although some of the children
also work to fulfil their lifestyle needs. There is an
assumption that working in the city is a cool thing for
people who come from the village or suburban area.
Some of them prefer to work as Child Domestic
Workers as this seems a better choice than being
married at a young age. Parents assume that their
child is an asset, so when the family economic
conditions are difficult, they are not reluctant to send
their daughters to marry at a young age. It is because
if their child is married, then all their responsibilities
as a parent are finished. However, if the children do
not want to get married, then they are required to help
the family economy by working, even though this
requires them to work outside their region as a child
domestic worker including facing all the risks.
The impact of the lack of interaction among child
domestic workers means that many of them are
unaware of the difficulties of their fellow child
domestic workers and do not know that they have
rights to join the union. Employers seem to disagree
and prevent child domestic workers from meeting
with the other child domestic workers, because they
will gossip and vilify their employers, compare their
working environments to other domestic workers and
find new jobs. In the housing complex in Gunung
Anyar Tambak Surabaya, meetings between domestic
workers are very rare. Generally, child domestic
workers only go shopping with their friends to fulfil
their needs as well as their employers’ need, not to
organise a movement to fight for their rights as child
domestic workers. Those employers’ restrictions are
because they are afraid that the child domestic
workers would ask unfulfilled demands and expose
their weaknesses.
On the other hand, child domestic workers make a
lot of friends and have a place to share their work
problems. It is possible that, since the children are
freer to say all kinds of issues to their peers, this
interaction will reduce their burden. Moreover, it is
possible to find the best way out of their problem.
SIWI is an institution that has an intervention
program and opens vast opportunities for child
domestic workers to report and tell their problems.
SIWI Community has several approaches or
strategies; those are: (1) outreach and organising child
domestic workers; (2) increasing the knowledge and
skills of domestic workers through training and
providing education sessions; (3) promoting decent
work for child domestic workers through social
media, religious leaders and government; (4)
conducting monitoring of the domestic workers’
community by involving the head of the housing
complex, and Pembinaan Kesejahteraan Keluarga
(Fostering Family Welfare) within the monitoring
area; (5) building networks with unions and hotline
services.
The SIWI Community is a model for monitoring
or control in the case of child domestic workers in
their environment, including dealing with their
relationship with their employers. Besides that, the
intention is to provide empowerment or educate the
employers in how to provide a decent work
environment including the treatment of child
domestic workers. The establishment of the SIWI
community is just one of several approaches and
strategies to promote a proper work environment, and
to eliminate or reduce child domestic workers as a
profession.
3 CONCLUSIONS
SIWI Community is a model that has been built and
developed by Samitra Abhaya KPPD. The intention
is to monitor or control the existence of domestic
workers in their environment including dealing with
their relationship with their employers. It is also
intended to provide empowerment and educate
employers regarding a decent work environment
ICoCSPA 2018 - International Conference on Contemporary Social and Political Affairs
130
approach including the treatment of child domestic
workers. The establishment of the SIWI community
model has its own activity programs to conduct
promotion and eliminate or reduce the number of
child domestic workers. Therefore, it is expected that
the rights and responsibility of domestic workers and
the employers will be more transparent, measurable
and monitored which will result in harmonious and
better relationships between child domestic workers
and the employers.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This research was supported by the Ministry of
Research, Technology and Higher Education
Indonesia
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